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A powerful religious revival known as the Great Awakening occurred in the British North American colonies from the 1720s to the 1740s. The revival was a movement among Protestant Christians who were reacting to a number of religious conditions in the colonies. It was a reaction against the reliance on reason as the basis for establishing religious truth and the emphasis on the use of authorized forms of worship. The movement was also a reaction against the increasing secularization of society and against the corporate and materialistic nature of the main American churches. The Great Awakening took place primarily among Dutch Reformed, Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Baptists, and some Anglicans, almost all of whom were Calvinists.

Followers of the Great Awakening had very emotional church services, because they believed that people showed their faith through their emotions. To them, faith was more important than doctrine. They also believed that ordinary people could know just as much about God as church officials did.

In fiery sermons, revivalist preachers emphasized the need for sinners to fear punishment from an all-powerful and angry God. By rejecting worldliness and returning to faith, however, one could hope for a return to God’s grace. The Great Awakening was an evangelical movement that emphasized the importance of personal conversion. Conversion was believed to be the first step on the road to salvation, and the conversion experience was opened up to all who recognized their own sinfulness. In this way, the ministers of the Great Awakening made Calvinist theology more democratic.

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George Whitefield of England was one of the most popular ministers of the Great Awakening. He traveled through the colonies in 1739–40, preaching in open fields because the churches were not big enough to hold the crowds he attracted. Jonathan Edwards also helped inspire the Great Awakening. He was the revival’s most important theologian, delivering a series of sermons on justification (the return to God’s grace) by faith alone. Gilbert Tennent, a Presbyterian minister from New Jersey, was another revival leader who drew large numbers of followers.

The preachers of the Great Awakening gained many converts. They also had many critics, who attacked them for provoking what the critics thought were excessive emotion and dangerous religious delusions. The revival ministers also preached in settled parishes without having been invited by church authorities.

The Great Awakening had a strong influence on colonial and later U.S. religion, culture, and politics. The revival of religious fervor stemmed the tide of Enlightenment rationalism among a great many people in the colonies. The Great Awakening caused serious divisions in several religious denominations. It also led to the establishment of missions to American Indians. Other consequences of the revival included the founding of educational institutions such as Brown, Rutgers, and Princeton universities and Dartmouth College. The increase in dissent from the established churches during this period led to a broader toleration of religious diversity. The Great Awakening was also one of the first important movements against slavery. Whitefield criticized brutal slaveholders and welcomed African Americans at services.

Some historians believe that the Great Awakening fed the fervor that resulted in the American Revolution. The revival encouraged democracy because everyone could participate in it. Emphasizing the importance of the individual, the Great Awakening was a reaction against established authorities. In addition, the enthusiasm of the revival was redirected into militant patriotism. Colonists with strong religious beliefs also began to question the fairness of taxes that benefited only the Church of England. Taxes soon became one of the American revolutionaries’ biggest complaints against the British.

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Another American revival, called the Second Great Awakening, occurred from the 1790s to the 1830s. It took place in New England and Kentucky and was less emotional than the Great Awakening. In Kentucky it was known for its large camp meetings, a type of outdoor revival meeting held on the American frontier. The Second Great Awakening produced a large increase in church membership and made “soul winning” the primary function of the ministry. The movement led to the founding of many colleges and seminaries and to the organization of mission societies. It also led to support for a variety of moral and social reform movements, including for temperance and women’s rights. (See alsorevivalism.)

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